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Prunus Apricot Pink Marry, Pollinator + Self Fertile + Early **FREE DELIVERY + 3 YEAR LTD WARRANTY**

Prunus armeniaca Pink Marry
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 £88.50 
Available Options:
Option Qty
St Julien A Bush Grows to 3.5m  

All fruit trees certified virus free with a Limited 3 Year Fruit Tree Warranty.  Click here for our FREE FRUIT TREE OFFERAll basic pruning requirements completed before delivery.

Prunus armeniaca Pink Marry Options Explained

St Julien A Bush Grows to 3.5m:
Delivered as 150-200cm tall in a 12L pot and a bush shape for improved fruiting and disease resistance.2-3 years old.

Prunus armeniaca Pink Marry
Probably not an apricot for the beginner, and by that we mean new to growing trees and not learning to drive. Your sucky driving skills have no effect on the apricots unless you get the accelerator and brake pedal mixed up as you park in the garden.

Pink Marry is a blessing and a curse kind of deal. Sort of like the vicar saying he wants to spend some one-on-one time with you....for an exorcism or the kids start talking about living by themselves, but present you with eviction papers.

The blessing is that it gives you an early harvest of orange/yellow red-blushed fruits with orange flesh, and the curse is that it means flowering is closer to frosty times. For those in the south, not so much of a problem.

Another blessing is high fruit yields (with pollination partner) from an early age (from mid-June), but the curse is that you will need to pay more attention to fruit thinning after flowering to ensure thinner branches are not snapping under their own weight, and the rest of the crop does not grow as well.

Other blessings include freestone (easier to eat and process), low cracking susceptibility after a drought period followed by heavy rain, and being a good pollinator for other apricots.

Other curses include less frost tolerance, so some locations will need to plant under glass or use fleece, shorter fruit shelf life compared to others and good strong taste compared to other early fruiters. If taste is what you are going for then later fruiting varieties have a deep flavour.

In summary, this is more of a pollinator and early fruiter for the experienced gardener.


Prunus armeniaca Pink Marry Flowering and Harvest Times
Flowers late March to early April with a high blossom density and harvest: Mid-June, making it one of the earliest varieties in UK.

Apricot Pink Marry will directly cross-pollinate with Tsunami™ Ea5016, Orangenaprikose, Goldrich, Robada, Lotte, Harogem, Carmingo™ Mediabel, Compacta, Goldcot and Golden Glow.

Other apricots it will cross-pollinate indirectly because they are early bloomers are Carmingo™ Pricia, Spring Blush® Ea3126th, Flopria And Tomcot. Other Indirect later bloomers that also pollinate are Kioto, Bergeron, Early Moorpark, Helena Du Roussillon, Bergeval® Aviclo, Carmingo™ Priabel, Iziagat And Orange Summer™ Zaitord

Although listed as self-fertile, this one would benefit from a pollination partner.


Planting Prunus armeniaca Pink Marry
Plant in full sun in moderately fertile (avoid over-rich soil as it causes excessive leafy growth and fewer flowers), moist, well-drained soil. Well-drained loam is ideal; sandy loam works well if enriched with organic matter.

A pH of slightly acidic to neutral (6.5–7.5), but it will tolerate mild alkalinity (chalky/calcareous soils) if drainage is good.

If you have clay, improve with grit/compost or plant on a mound/raised bed.


Other Information about Prunus armeniaca Pink Marry
A strong central leader makes it good for orchards and structured trees.
Eventual height to 4 m and spread 3 m.
Good as a dessert apricot or for cooking.
Very high-yielding from an early age.
Medium vigour and growth rate.
Good for fresh consumption.
Fruits last up to 3 days.

Quick Fruit Tree Links
Take a look at our 
TOP SELLING FRUIT TREES, Wet ground issues then choose a PEAR TREE first, followed by APPLE TREES. For more information on pollination please look at choosing the CORRECT POLLINATION PARTNER

Fruit Tree Life Expectancy
Most fruit trees will give you AT LEAST 40 years of fruit. Pears can go to 70. Records of 200 year old trees exist but this is the exception, not the rule.

Do I Need To Stake My Bare Root Fruit Tree?
9 out of 10 times the answer will be no, especially if under 200cm tall. However our article on Tree Staking should help guide you. 

Climate Change
Climate Change has increased aesthetic foliage issues such as Powdery Mildew, Shothole, Rust, frost damage etc These are not terminal issues and will usually last a season or less. All trees are inspected before being sent out to ensure they are fundamentally healthy and will bounce back. 

Planting In The Corner Of A Garden 
Air and light is reduced in this location which could promote fungus and bacterial issues. If the corner is of the house and a fence then you also have leeching issues to contend with from cement and wood preservatives. Also when it rains, that area would experience higher water levels so we advise against it unless the plant is very hardy. 

Fruit Tree Heights
Taller does not mean more value for money. A 1 year old fruit tree can easily be substantially higher than a 2 year old, this is because they are hard pruned at 1 year old to create the desired shape. Some trees have over 100cm of height removed. They can then have another pruning at 2 years old to increase fruit growing real estate. Most fruit trees will benefit from having a third to half of the seasons new growth cut back in the Autumn to prevent long whippy branches which break easily. Age and pruning completed determine real value. 

Apricot Rootstocks Explained
Rootstocks are literally roots of another plant and are used to change characteristics of the Apricot tree such as disease resistance, fruiting ability etc. New rootstocks are used all the time as new ones are developed. Below is a brief explanation of Apricot rootstocks.

VVA1:
Expected to grow to around 2.5m tall.
Torrinel24: 
Expected to grow to around 3.0m tall.
Montclere: 
Expected to grow to around 3.0m tall.
Ferlenain: Expected to grow to around 3.0m tall.
Wavit: Slightly less vigorous than St Julian, circa 3-3.5m apricot tree and crops a little earlier. Some chalk tolerance. 
St Julian A: Expected to grow to around 3.5-4m tall and is quite vigorous with some chalk tolerance. 
Myrobalan Seedling: A vigorous rootstock and ultimate height of 4m or more. Full cropping is longer than previous rootstock. 
Peach Seedling: Better tolerance to water logging and firmer/sweeter flesh than Myrobalan. Grows to around 4m. 

The trade off with a taller tree is more growing real estate but a smaller tree will fruit a little quicker. Ultimate height can be determined with manual pruning. 

Apricot Tree Advice
Not a very demanding tree but a few things to remember.

  • Make sure you plant the apricot tree in a well drained spot where there is a lot of sun.
  • Balanced feed in early spring, NPK 10-10-10. No heavy nitrogen after June. 
  • Self fertile apricot fruit yields are improved by other compatible apricots nearby.
  • Prune the tree every year to allow sun in and air to circulate into the centre.
  • Fruits are ripe when you can pull them easily from the branch. 
  • A fleece over the tree or planting close to a wall can mitigate frost damage. 
  • Prune late winter. Aim for open vase shape. Remove dead, diseased and crossing branches.
  • Consistent watering is essential. A dry spell followed by watering/heavy rain can split the fruit.
  • All stone fruit, including apricots don't winter well in pots. Move under glass, near a wall and/or out of the wind. Thermally wrap the pot, mulch the surface and prevent freezing. 
Apricot Fruit Thinning
Around 6 weeks after flowering, check the fruits. You want fruit spacing of around 15cm and 1-2 fruits per cluster. The ones to remove are those pointing up, smaller than the others, double fruited and odd shapes. Most fruit trees naturally drop fruits in June. 
 
Thinning improves size of final fruits, branch breakages, uneven yearly crop sizes and air circulation. 

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